February 03, 2014 | InCITE | Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT | Google may have won a couple of battles this week, like unloading Motorola's handset business and signing a patent deal with Samsung, but it also became clear that Google's Android empire is unravelling. | White Paper: OutSystems Download this ebook and learn how to reinvigorate your IT Department with these 3 innovative techniques that will control the cost of change, increase productivity, and help your business differentiate from the competition. Learn More | Microsoft continues to add multi-platform mobile management capabilities to System Center and Intune including support for iOS 7 management features. While the company has yet to catch up with dedicated EMM vendors, the fact that these features are extensions of tools that many IT professionals already use every day could give Microsoft a leg up as the company further develops its strategy in this space. | Resource compliments of: CITE Conference + Expo You've heard about consumerization...but how can you use it to give your organization a competitive edge? Find out at the third annual Consumerization of IT in the Enterprise (CITE) April 2729 in San Francisco. Learn how consumer-driven technology can transform your business, your workplace, and your customer relationships. Learn more | By using technology in the new library, more could be done for a larger audience at a much lower cost than by erecting a traditional large building with rows of books and shelves. | News that Chrome apps are going mobile is yet more evidence that Google is aggressively pushing its Chrome OS, perhaps to the long-term detriment of Android. | Businesses and app developers face a dizzying number of platforms and devices, and as you would expect, they are struggling to understand how to support them. We talk to Telerik about its approach to the problem. | BitGlass launched this morning, offering a new method that some people are calling SaaS firewall for managing corporate content accessed via mobile devices. | Apple's colorful low-end phone has not sold as well expected, proving once again that Apple customers want the whole package or nothing at all. | | | |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment